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Seven million immigrants can't be good for Britain
The Government has not considered how to fit enough new arrivals to
create a city the size of London into the already over-crowded South
East, says Alasdair Palmer.
By Alasdair Palmer
Last Updated: 6:22PM GMT 14 Mar 2009
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The UN predicted last week that the population of Britain would rise
to 72 million by 2050. Actually, the increase will probably happen
faster than that. According to the Government's own figures, Britain's
population will reach 71 million not in 40 years, but in just over 20:
its forecast is that we will get there in 2031, because it thinks the
number of immigrants who will arrive here is going to be higher than
the UN's prediction.
The rise will be almost entirely the result of immigration. If there
were to be no immigration at all into Britain, the population would
hover around its present figure of 61 million. But the Government
predicts that net migration into Britain (that is, the total of those
coming in minus the total number of people emigrating) will be around
190,000 a year for the foreseeable future.
The consequential population increase, which may be as high as 10
million, is enormously significant. It represents adding a city bigger
than London (the population of which is now about seven and a half
million). England, with a population density of 395 people per square
kilometre, is already the most crowded country in Europe: we are
packed more densely than the Dutch in Holland. There are nearly three
times as many of us squashed into every square kilometre here as there
are in every square kilometre of France.
Most of the new immigrants will gravitate towards the South East,
because that's where the jobs and the money are. Suppose seven million
migrants end up in the South: the existing infrastructure will have to
be drastically overhauled. Already, there are acute shortages of
housing, of school places and of doctors. Seven million extra people
will mean several million more cars driving on roads which are already
permanently congested. The provision even of such basics as water will
have to be completely rethought.
Has the Government a plan for dealing with any of this? It has not. It
has not seriously considered what needs to be done to supply an extra
seven million people with the necessities of modern life, still less
contemplated the impact it will have on the environment. The
Government's only response has been to dismantle planning restrictions
in order to allow private companies to build houses on every available
piece of land, including public green spaces such as parks.
And yet the increase in population will be entirely the result of
Labour's policy of encouraging immigration at historically
unprecedented levels. In 1997, Labour abolished the "Primary Purpose
Rule", which required immigrants to show that "marriage was not
entered into primarily to obtain admission to the UK". Immigration by
spouses increased by 50 per cent as a consequence, so that more than
40,000 arrived last year. Labour has also trebled the number of work
permits granted since 1997: nearly 140,000 were issued in 2008,
compared with around 47,000 in 1997. Whether deliberately or not,
Labour also lost control of the asylum system after 1998, so that
between 1999 and 2000 asylum seekers were, at over 80,000 a year, the
largest category of immigrants to the UK.
The number of asylum seekers has now dropped to not much more than
20,000 a year. But net immigration is going to remain extremely high,
in spite of the economic recession, for the simple reason that life in
the UK is a hell of a lot better than it is in most developing
countries. Relative stability, freedom from arbitrary violence and
predatory government are as important as free education, medical care
and benefits for your family if you are out of work. It makes life
here far better than anything that could be reasonably expected in
most developing countries. That is why the number of people who will
do everything they can to ensure that they can immigrate to this
country will remain very high.
Should we turn them away? There is a moral case for high levels of
immigration, based on the view that we have an obligation to share our
wealth with the less well-off, wherever they come from. That, however,
is not the case for mass immigration that Labour has put to the
electorate, perhaps because it is aware that not many people are
persuaded by it. Labour's argument has been couched entirely in terms
of economic self-interest – and that case is almost totally spurious.
Were either main party to propose bringing back serious and effective
restrictions on immigration, they would gain significant electoral
support, and not just from the white working class. Some of the
strongest supporters of reducing immigration are recent immigrants,
for they suffer most from the competition of newer arrivals who are
willing to work for even less in even harsher conditions. The
consensus among the bien pensants that immigration is an unalloyed
benefit has been so strong for so long that it will take a great deal
of political courage from either Labour or the Conservatives to oppose
it. But does anyone seriously think that squashing in an extra seven
million people over the next 20 years is going to make this country a
better place in which to live?
Sunday, 15 March 2009
And not a mention of the EU.
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Posted by Britannia Radio at 10:40